Goat Herder
Gutter Rider
So by your own findings motorcycles should all have rim brakes?

The difference is hard to believe, but a friend who rides mountain bikes tells me hydraulic disc brakes are as much a change for the better as cable to hydraulic?
So by your own findings motorcycles should all have rim brakes?
I road many a mile with V brakes I don't like them any more since finding good disk brakes.
Why Disk Brakes Are Better Than V Brakes on a Mountain Bike
The technical misconceptions and hogwash in that article are almost as impressive as your own. I'll critique yours when it's particularly detrimental for other readers here, but I'll just say that on the basis of that article, no technical opinion by that writer should be trusted.
Energy is proportional to velocity squared. It applies to vehicles and to brakes, too. You and the author of that article should try to figure out the implications.
Chalo
Based on a data sheet that is going on 10 years old! Where you nonchalantly drummed up your own percentages?Magura Gustav M discs (which performed best in the test but failed at 1100W dissipation) are still just about the stoutest available. At that time the used (I believe) 180mm rotors. An equally sturdy 203mm rotor would offer 13% more braking leverage and heat rejection with the same caliper. That means it fails at 1240W instead. It's not an overwhelming difference.
Chalo
In my observation, 203mm rotors tend to be spindlier than the old Gustav M rotor, larger but with no more surface area. Magura now offers the Gustav M with a 210mm rotor.
Chalo
There is no substitute for heat capacity to dump energy into, and surface area to reject it from. A 203mm stainless steel rotor weighs about 180g and has a specific heat of .5 joule per gram per degree C. A Velocity B43 rim weighs about 770g and has a specific heat of .9 joule per gram per degree C. And the rim has much higher thermal conductivity, and it has many times the surface area, so it can absorb a lot more heat and reject it many times faster than a disc rotor.
That's why disc brakes can work so impressively at modest loadings, but fail long before rim brakes that seem unimpressive by comparison. They're perfectly adequate for normal size riders on normal weight bikes moving at normal bike speeds. Turn up the energy levels from there, and you can have problems.
Chalo
I find a 165mm rotor to be more than adequate for the rear brake on my mountain bike. I use a 9" (229mm) hard anodized aluminum rotor on the front. The thick aluminum rotor has more heat capacity, as well as more surface area to reject heat and more mechanical advantage at the caliper. But that's appropriate for a front brake that can apply at least three times as much braking as the rear.
Chalo
Well lets see I told you that I had the pads hot enough to see obvious smoke vapors. At the time of my observations I had a Avid BB7 203mm in the front and a V brake in the rear. To make things perfectly clear I was doing panic stops from 30 miles an hour. Why one should know there limitations. Total of one test stop did it. I had no fade from ether brake at the time as it was a one time panic stop. Not multiple. To check them immediately again the rear had faded more than the front.Because the physics are contrary to your experience, I chalked that up to peculiarities with your equipment. I already showed you how a good rim can soak up seven and a half times as much heat as a 203mm rotor, and pass that heat to the air several times faster. And I have shown you tests that demonstrate disc brakes fail at lower energy levels than rim brakes.
So I have to conclude that your rim braked wheels were simply not the equal of your disc braked wheels.
Chalo
This is a great thing to bring up but I think if more folks use thicker gauge spokes it is a bit of a moot point.Disc front wheels are dished, therefore weaker than equivalent symmetrical front wheels. Disc rear wheels have narrow flange spacing, therefore less stiffness than conventional rear wheels.
Chalo
You are not immune your selfThose guys are not immune from getting things wrong. In this case, they were wrong. A disc braked wheel must be built with a stronger rim and/or more spokes to be equally as strong as a given non-disc wheel. Fortunately, most of them are built that way.
Chalo
At which point I think a bicycle with a motor on it can enter this category. My Morini with straight wheels to this day.. has not been all that bad. While I would adment with any of these said brakes coming down off the crest of say the Sandia Mountains would be particularly foolish and does not fit my agenda for such riding. A 50cc motor can only take so much of a beating when perhaps it should be let to cool off as well.No-- the energy levels are too high and the tires too fat to make rim brakes a good match.
Chalo
While we were waiting for an ambulance the ride leader pulled the front wheel out and took the tire apart. The tube had begun to melt in several places.